Sensing of non-volatile memory cell having two complementary memory transistors

ABSTRACT

Voltage is increased on a wordline signal. The wordline signal is applied to a programmed FET and an unprogrammed FET of a memory cell. The programmed FET has a higher threshold voltage than the unprogrammed FET. The programmed FET is connected to a first bitline and the unprogrammed FET is connected to a second bitline. It is determined that the second bitline has reached a threshold voltage. In response to determining the second bitline has reached the threshold voltage, the first bitline is pulled towards ground. A signal is output based on a low voltage of the first bitline and a high voltage of the second bitline.

BACKGROUND

The present disclosure relates to computer memory, and more specifically, to a sense circuit for non-volatile memory.

Non-volatile memory is computer memory which can retain stored information even when not powered. Some types of non-volatile memory may contain field-effect transistors which may be programmed. Charge trapping can be used to shift the voltage threshold of field-effect transistors.

SUMMARY

According to embodiments of the present disclosure, a method for sensing a non-volatile memory cell is disclosed. The method includes increasing a voltage of a wordline signal. The wordline signal is applied to a programmed FET and an unprogrammed FET of a memory cell. The programmed FET has a higher threshold voltage than the unprogrammed FET. The programmed FET is connected to a first bitline and the unprogrammed FET is connected to a second bitline. The method further includes determining the second bitline has reached a threshold voltage. The method further includes, in response to the determining the second bitline has reached the threshold voltage, pulling the first bitline towards ground. The method further includes outputting a signal based on a low voltage of the first bitline and a high voltage of the second bitline.

Further disclosed herein are embodiments of a circuit for sensing a non-volatile memory cell. The circuit includes a first NFET connected to a first bitline and a second NFET connected to a second bitline. The first NFET is configured to pull the first bitline toward ground in response to the second bitline reaching a first voltage. The second NFET is configured to pull the second bitline toward ground in response to the first bitline reaching a second voltage.

The above summary is not intended to describe each illustrated embodiment or every implementation of the present disclosure.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE SEVERAL VIEWS OF THE DRAWINGS

The drawings included in the present application are incorporated into, and form part of, the specification. They illustrate embodiments of the present disclosure and, along with the description, serve to explain the principles of the disclosure. The drawings are only illustrative of certain embodiments and do not limit the disclosure.

FIG. 1 depicts a diagram of an example memory circuit with a sensing circuit for sensing the programming of memory cells.

FIG. 2 depicts a flow diagram of an example method for sensing the programming of a nonvolatile memory cell.

FIG. 3 depicts a graph of example waveforms associated with a memory cell and sense circuit.

While the invention is amenable to various modifications and alternative forms, specifics thereof have been shown by way of example in the drawings and will be described in detail. It should be understood, however, that the intention is not to limit the invention to the particular embodiments described. On the contrary, the intention is to cover all modifications, equivalents, and alternatives falling within the spirit and scope of the invention.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION

Aspects of the present disclosure relate to sense circuits for non-volatile memory. While the present disclosure is not necessarily limited to such applications, various aspects of the disclosure may be appreciated through a discussion of various examples using this context.

Embodiments of the present disclosure may provide for a sense circuit for sensing the state of a non-volatile memory cell. The memory cell has two field-effect transistors (FETs). The memory cell is programmed to create a logical zero or a logical one based on which FET is programmed. Programming the FET may be done using charge trapping to increase the voltage threshold (Vt) on the programmed FET.

Both FETs share the same wordline signal. As the wordline signal increases, the FET with the lower Vt (i.e. the unprogrammed FET) will turn on first, pulling its corresponding bitline up first as well as pulling it up faster than the bitline connected to the programmed FET. The sense circuit includes large cross-coupled NFETs connected to each bitline. The bitline which rises first turns on the NFET connected to the opposing bitline which pulls the opposing bitline towards ground and prevents it from turning on the second NFET. This keeps the bitline for the unprogrammed FET high and the bitline for the programmed FET low.

In some embodiments, each bitline is further connected to a PFET keeper device which finishes the bitline which activates its corresponding NFET to full supply voltage (Vdd). Further, each bitline may be connected to an inverter which outputs a signal for the sense circuit based on the voltages of each bitline.

Referring to FIG. 1, a diagram of an example memory circuit 100 with a sensing circuit 102 for sensing the programming of memory cells is depicted. Circuit 100 includes three memory cells which each include two FETs. A first memory cell includes FETs 110 a-b. A second memory cell includes FETs 120 a-b. A third memory cell includes FETs 130 a-b. Although, three memory cells are depicted, any number of memory cells may be included. There is a wordline signal for each memory cell. Wordline 105 is shared by FETs 110 a-b. Wordline 115 is shared by FETs 120 a-b. Wordline 125 is shared by FETs 130 a-b.

To program one of the FETs of a memory cell, a high voltage may be applied to the FET through the corresponding wordline and supply voltage 135. The bitline for the FET to be programmed may be brought to ground to provide a stream of electrons flowing through the FET. Electrons may be trapped in the gate dielectric of the NFET (or holes trapped in the gate dielectric of the PFET) which leads to a higher absolute Vt for the respective FET type. As depicted, program true 145 a may be activated to turn on FET 140 a and bring bitline 190 a down to ground to program either FET 110 a, FET 120 a, or FET 130 a. Similarly, program complement may be activated to turn on FET 140 b and bring bitline 190 b down to ground to program either FET 110 b, FET 120 b, or FET 130 b.

For example, to program FET 110 a, wordline 105 and supply voltage 135 are set to a high voltage. Program true 145 a is made high to activate FET 140 a and pull bitline 190 a toward ground. This causes high energy electrons (charge carriers) to flow through the channel of NFET (FET) 110 a and become trapped in the gate dielectric of the device causing the absolute value of the Vt to increase.

FETs 150 a-b may be configured to protect sense circuit 102 from the high voltage produced during the programming of memory cells.

To prepare for sensing the programming of a memory cell, bitlines 190 a-b may be precharged to ground and balanced. Precharge 165 may be brought high to activate NFET 155, which balances bitlines 190 a-b, and to activate NFETs 160 a-b to bring bitlines 190 a-b to ground. Supply voltage 135 is applied and the wordline applied to the applicable memory cell rises. A slow wordline slew may be used to help differentiate between the programmed and unprogrammed FETs in the memory cell. An example slow wordline slew increases from 10% Vdd to 90% Vdd in about 200-800 ps (picoseconds). As the wordline voltage increases, it activates the FETs of the memory cell causing the voltage of the corresponding bitlines to increase. The unprogrammed FET will turn on first as it has a lower Vt. Thus, the bitline connected to the unprogrammed FET will increase faster than the bitline connected to the programmed FET.

NFETs 180 a-b are configured to pull the connected bitline to ground when turned on by the other bitline. NFET 180 a is configured to pull bitline 190 a toward ground in response to the increase in voltage of bitline 190 b. Similarly, NFET 180 b is configured to pull bitline 190 b toward ground in response to the increase in voltage of bitline 190 a. Thus, the bitline whose voltage rises faster keeps rising while preventing the other bitline from rising. NFETs 180 a-b may be much larger than the FETs of the memory cells such that they overpower the FET quickly when pulling the corresponding bitline to ground.

Additionally, inverters 170 a-b and PFETs 175 a-b are configured to pull the faster rising bitline to full Vdd rail. Inverters 170 a-b are configured to change output from high to low once the input bitline reaches a specified voltage. The low output turns on the corresponding PFET 175 a or 175 b which brings the bitline to full Vdd rail.

Inverters 185 a-b provide output from sense circuit 102. Inverter 185 a may provide the main output for sense circuit 102. For example, a high output from inverter 185 a may represent a logical one and a low output may represent a logical zero.

For example, assume FET 120 a has been programmed. To read the memory cell containing FETs 120 a-b, bitlines 190 a-b are balanced and brought to ground with precharge 165. Precharge 165 is turned off and wordline 115 is slowly raised. FET 120 b has a lower Vt than FET 120 a. Thus, FET 120 b will turn on first and cause bitline 190 b to rise before bitline 190 a. Bitline 190 b will turn on NFET 180 a which will pull bitline 190 a toward ground. Inverter 170 b will change its output to low in response to rising bitline 190 b and activate PFET 175 b to bring bitline 190 b to Vdd rail. The main output from inverter 185 a will be high (i.e. logical one) in response to bitline 190 a being low and the output of inverter 185 b will be low in response to bitline 190 b being high. Sense circuit 102 may stay in this state until a new precharge to ground.

Referring to FIG. 2, a flow diagram of an example method 200 for sensing the programming of a nonvolatile memory cell is depicted. At block 210, the bitlines coming from each FET in the memory cell are precharged to ground and balanced. At block 220, the precharge is turned off. At block 230, the wordline voltage for the memory cell is increased. A slow wordline slew may be used such as a wordline slew that increases from 10% Vdd to 90% Vdd in about 200-800 ps. At block 240, it is determined that a first bitline has reached a threshold voltage. The first bitline may be applied to the gate of an NFET which has the threshold voltage. At block 250, in response to determining that the first bitline has reached the threshold voltage, the second bitline is pulled toward ground. The NFET may be turned on by the first bitline to pull the second bitline toward ground. The NFET may be much larger than the memory cell FET such that the bitline may be pulled toward ground quickly. At block 260, the first bitline is pulled up to Vdd rail. At block 270, a signal is output based on the voltages of the first and second bitlines. The signal may represent a logical zero or a logical one.

Referring to FIG. 3, a graph 300 of example waveforms associated with a memory cell and sense circuit such as that depicted in FIG. 1. At the left side of graph 300, the precharge 310 is high which causes the bitlines 330 a-b, 340 a-b to be low. Bitline 330 a and bitline 340 a are the bitlines on the memory cell side while bitline 330 b and bitline 340 b are the corresponding bitlines on the sense circuit side. When precharge 310 is turned off, bitlines 330 a-b, 340 a-b float. The wordline 320 slowly rises and turns on the FETs in the memory cell to cause bitlines 330 a-b, 340 a-b to rise. A signal delta develops between bitlines 330 a-b and 340 a-b as bitlines 330 a-b are connected to the memory cell FET with the lower Vt. Bitline 330 b activates a large NFET which pulls bitlines 340 a-b toward ground and prevents them from rising. The output of an inverter 350 goes low in response to rising bitline 330 b. The low output of inverter 350 opens a PFET which pulls up bitline 330 b to Vdd rail.

The descriptions of the various embodiments of the present disclosure have been presented for purposes of illustration, but are not intended to be exhaustive or limited to the embodiments disclosed. Many modifications and variations will be apparent to those of ordinary skill in the art without departing from the scope and spirit of the described embodiments. The terminology used herein was chosen to explain the principles of the embodiments, the practical application or technical improvement over technologies found in the marketplace, or to enable others of ordinary skill in the art to understand the embodiments disclosed herein. 

What is claimed is:
 1. A method comprising: increasing a first voltage of a first wordline signal, the first wordline signal applied to a first programmed FET and a first unprogrammed FET of a first memory cell, the first programmed FET having a higher threshold voltage than the first unprogrammed FET, the first programmed FET connected to a first bitline and the first unprogrammed FET connected to a second bitline, the first bitline connected to a first NFET, a first PFET, and a first inverter, the second bitline connected to a second NFET, a second PFET, and a second inverter; determining, by the first NFET, the second bitline has reached a first threshold voltage; in response to the determining the second bitline has reached the first threshold voltage, pulling, by the first NFET, the first bitline towards ground; determining, by the second PFET, an output from the second inverter has reached a second threshold voltage; in response to the determining the output from the second inverter has reached the second threshold voltage, pulling, by the second PFET, the second bitline toward a supply voltage; and outputting a first signal based on a low voltage of the first bitline and a high voltage of the second bitline.
 2. The method of claim 1, wherein the first voltage increases from 10% Vdd to 90% Vdd in a time range between 200 ps and 800 ps.
 3. The method of claim 1, further comprising: precharging the first bitline and the second bitline to ground prior to the increasing the first voltage of the first wordline signal.
 4. The method of claim 1, further comprising: precharging the first bitline and the second bitline to ground after the outputting the first signal; increasing a second voltage of a second wordline signal, the second wordline signal applied to a second programmed FET and a second unprogrammed FET of a second memory cell, the second programmed FET having a higher threshold voltage than the second unprogrammed FET, the second programmed FET connected to the second bitline and the second unprogrammed FET connected to the first bitline; and determining, by the second NFET, the first bitline has reached a third threshold voltage; in response to the determining the first bitline has reached the third threshold voltage, pulling, by the second NFET, the second bitline towards ground; determining, by the first PFET, an output from the first inverter has reached a fourth threshold voltage; in response to the determining the output from the first inverter has reached the fourth threshold voltage, pulling, by the second PFET, the first bitline toward the supply voltage; and outputting a second signal based on a high voltage of the first bitline and a low voltage of the second bitline. 